I am a long time viewer of the DIS Unplugged podcasts, but this is my first post to the boards. I watched and listened to Pete's comments about the FastPass + testing at Toy Story Mainia! last week, and have been reading some of the comments since testing has ended, and I have to say that I believe the criticism is a little unwarranted.
I am in full agreement that if this is fully implemented it would be a bad thing. But coming from the technology testing industry I sort of understand the process. Disney has a responsibility to fully test to capacity the nearly 1.5 billion that it has cost to implement FastPass + and the technology that comes with it.
Everyone has to remember that this is a test. In order to do their due diligence they have to test every aspect of the technology, both to see what works and what doesn't. Unfortunately the only way to really test if something like this would work is to test it on one of the most popular rides during normal business hours, for more than just one day. Disney doesn't have a test environment for this so it means that it WILL impact the guest experience. A test at a less popular ride, or even during slower times, will not give a true benchmark of the metrics that they are trying to capture. Once Disney has concluded the test, they will gather all of the data including wait times, ride capacity, and guest experience and will be able to tell what aspects worked, what didn't, and if it is a viable solution. For all we know from the outside, Disney had to rule this out in order to be able to request funds to add or change something else (say and additional TSM track).
I tend to give Disney the benefit of the doubt when they are just testing things. I am old enough to remember the tests for the Legacy FastPass system, and I remember that people hated that too.